highlights of the 2020 gips standards january 30, 2020 …
TRANSCRIPT
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE
2020 GIPS® STANDARDS
JANUARY 30, 2020
CFA SOCIETY NEBRASKA
Omaha Marriott
The CFA Institute Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®) are an investment industry standard for
calculating and presenting historical investment performance.
2
INTRODUCTION
By establishing standardized requirements
for calculating and presenting performance,
the GIPS standards make it possible for:
Investment managers to compete on
an equal footing in all markets.
Investors to compare the past
performance of asset managers.
Asset owners to fully disclose and
fairly present performance to
oversight bodies and stakeholders.
Over 1,700 organizations, across 46 markets, claim compliance with the GIPS standards.
The GIPS standards are developed,
maintained, and promoted through the
collaboration of:
Volunteers from the investment
community
GIPS Standards Sponsors, which
include 60+ not-for-profit
organizations
CFA Institute®, a global association
of investment management
professionals
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GIPS STANDARDS SPONSORS (AS OF 30 JUNE 2019)
Australia Financial Services Council
(FSC)
Canada Canadian Investment
Performance Council (CIPC)
China CFA Society Beijing
Cyprus CFA Society Cyprus
Czech Republic CFA Society Czech
Republic and Czech Capital Market
Association (AKAT)
Denmark CFA Society Denmark and The
Danish Finance Society
France CFA Society France and
Association Française de la Gestion
Financière (AFG)
Germany German Asset Management
Standards Committee (GAMSC):
Bundesverband Investment und Asset,
Manager e.V. (BVI); Deutsche Vereinigung
fur Finanzanalyse und Assetment
Management (DVFA); and CFA Society
Germany
Ghana Ghana Securities Industry
Association (GSIA)
Greece CFA Society Greece
India CFA Society India
Indonesia CFA Society Indonesia and
Indonesia Association of Mutual Fund
Managers (Asosiasi Pengelola Reksa
Dana Indonesia, or APRDI)
Ireland Irish Association of Investment
Managers (IAIM)
Italy Italian Investment Performance
Committee (IIPC): Associazione Bancaria
Italiana (ABI); Associazione Italiana degli
Analisti e Consulenti Finanziari (AIAF);
Assogestioni; Società per lo sviluppo del
Mercato dei Fondi Pensione (Mefop);
Associazione Italiana Revisori Contabili
(Assirevi); and CFA Society Italy
Japan The Securities Analysts Association
of Japan (SAAJ)
Kazakhstan Association of Financial and
Investment Analysts (AFIA)
Korea Korea Investment Performance
Committee (KIPC)
Liechtenstein Liechtenstein Bankers
Association (LBA)
Mexico CFA Society Mexico
Micronesia Asia Pacific Association for
Fiduciary Studies (APAFS)
The Netherlands VBA-
Beleggingsprofessionals
New Zealand CFA Society New Zealand
Nigeria Nigeria Investment Performance
Committee: CFA Society Nigeria; Pensions
Operators Association of Nigeria
(PENOP); and Fund Managers Association
of Nigeria (FMAN)
Norway The Norwegian Society of
Financial Analysts (NFF)
Pakistan CFA Society Pakistan
Peru Procapitales
Philippines CFA Society Philippines;
Fund Managers Association of the
Philippines (FMAP) and Trust Officers
Association of the Philippines (TOAP)
Poland CFA Society Poland
Portugal Associação Portuguesa de
Analista Financeiros (APAF)
Russia CFA Association Russia
Saudi Arabia CFA Society Saudi Arabia
Singapore Investment Management
Association of Singapore (IMAS)
South Africa Association for Savings and
Investment South Africa (ASISA)
Spain Asociación Española de
Presentación de Resultados de Gestión
Sri Lanka CFA Society Sri Lanka
Sweden CFA Society Sweden and The
Swedish Society of Financial Analysts
(Sveriges Finansanalytikers Forening or
SFF)
Switzerland Swiss Funds & Asset
Management Association (SFAMA)
Thailand The Association of Provident
Fund (AOP)
Ukraine The Ukrainian Association of
Investment Business (UAIB)
United Kingdom United Kingdom
Investment Performance Committee
(UKIPC): The Investment Association
(TIA); The Association of British Insurers
(ABI); Pensions and Lifetime Savings
Association (PLSA); The Association of
Consulting Actuaries (ACA); The Society
of Pension Consultants (SPC); The
Investment Property Forum (IPF); The
Alternative Investment Management
Association (AIMA); and The Wealth
Management Association (WMA)
United States United States Investment
Performance Committee (USIPC) of CFA
Institute
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KEEPING PACE WITH A DYNAMIC INDUSTRY
Objectives for updating the GIPS standards
• Make the GIPS standards more relevant for pooled funds, which do not fit neatly
into the current composite construction or GIPS standards reporting framework.
• Make the GIPS standards more relevant for all asset classes, including
alternative investment funds/strategies.
• Better address applicability for asset owners.
• Consolidate guidance that has expanded since the 2010 edition of the GIPS
standards was issued.
2010
The Exposure Draft of the 2020 GIPS Standards (2020
Exposure Draft) was available for public comment from
1 September 2018 through 31 December 2018
We received more than
5,200 individual comments
from more than 120
organizations
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HOW WE GOT HERE
• The purpose of today’s presentation is to
provide highlights of the 2020 GIPS standards
• For a more detailed overview, watch the
recorded webinars on www.gipsstandards.org
• The 2020 GIPS standards are available at
www.cfainstitute.org
Proposed changes were then
reviewed with and approved by
the GIPS Standards Technical
Committee and the GIPS
Standards Executive Committee
Every comment was evaluated
and considered, resulting in
recommendations for changes to
some of the provisions
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“CHAPTERS” IN THE 2020 GIPS STANDARDS
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GIPS STANDARDS FOR FIDUCIARY MANAGEMENT PROVIDERS
• The GIPS Standards for Fiduciary Management Providers
are only applicable to those organizations that meet
the definition of a fiduciary management provider in
The Investment Consultancy and Fiduciary Management
Market Investigation Order 2019 issued by the Competition
and Market Authority of the United Kingdom.
• Compliance with the GIPS Standards for Fiduciary
Management Providers is mandatory in the UK and is
enforced by the Financial Conduct Authority.
• There are similarities between Fiduciary Management
Providers in the UK and the global OCIO market. CFA
Institute is considering expanding on GIPS Standards for
Fiduciary Management Providers to develop a standard for
the global OCIO market. Please share your thoughts
about this idea!
General Provisions
1. Fundamentals of Compliance
2. Input Data and Calculation Methodology
3. Composite and Pooled Fund Maintenance
GIPS Composite Reports
4. Time-Weighted Returns
5. Money-Weighted Returns
GIPS Pooled Fund Reports
6. Time-Weighted Returns
7. Money-Weighted Returns
8. GIPS Advertising Guidelines
• Composites
• Limited Distribution Pooled Funds
• Broad Distribution Pooled Funds
Glossary
Appendices
• Sample GIPS Composite Reports
• Sample GIPS Pooled Fund Reports
• Sample GIPS Advertisements
• Sample Lists
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SECTIONS IN THE 2020 GIPS STANDARDS FOR FIRMS
PORTFOLIO TYPES
Segregated
Account
A portfolio owned by a single client.
Broad
Distribution
Pooled Fund
(BDPF)
A pooled fund that is regulated under a
framework that would permit the general
public to purchase or hold the pooled
fund’s shares and is not exclusively
offered in one-on-one presentations.
e.g. US ‘40 Act mutual funds,
UCITS funds
Limited
Distribution
Pooled Fund
(LDPF)
Any pooled fund that is NOT a Broad
Distribution Pooled Fund.
e.g. Limited Partnerships,
Private Equity Funds
“Portfolio” includes segregated accounts and pooled funds. Firms need to classify all portfolios as either a…
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5P
1F
• Firm definition captures universe of 25 portfolios
• 20 segregated accounts (S) and 5 pooled funds (F)
• All are actual, fee-paying, discretionary portfolios
• 6 different strategies (indicated by color)
• 1 pooled fund’s strategy is not offered as a
segregated account (black)
PORTFOLIO: An individually managed
group of investments. A portfolio may be a
segregated account or a pooled fund.
COMPOSITE: An aggregation of one or more portfolios
that are managed according to a similar investment
mandate, objective, or strategy. A composite must
include all portfolios that meet the composite definition
S S S S F
S F S S S
S S S F S
F S S S S
S F S S S
REQUIRED COMPOSITES: AN EXAMPLE
4 S
3 S
+
2 F
5 S
+
1 F
4 S
+
1 F
4 S 1 F
• 5 composites are required, 1 composite is optional
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GIPS COMPOSITE REPORT: A presentation for
a composite that includes all of the information
required by the GIPS standards. May also include
recommended or supplemental information
GIPS POOLED FUND REPORT: A presentation for
a pooled fund that includes all of the information
required by the GIPS standards. May also include
recommended or supplemental information
• The term “GIPS Report” includes both GIPS Composite
Reports and GIPS Pooled Fund Reports.
• Presentation of gross only returns, net only returns, or
both returns is the firm’s choice, subject to regulatory
requirements.
GIPS REPORTS (FORMERLY COMPLIANT PRESENTATIONS)
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SAMPLE
PROVIDING GIPS REPORTS TO PROSPECTS
If the investment
will be in a …
Then …
Segregated Account • Firms must make every reasonable effort to provide a GIPS Composite Report to all
prospective clients when they initially become prospective clients.
• Once the firm has provided a GIPS Composite Report to a prospective client, the firm must
provide an updated GIPS Composite Report at least once every 12 months, if the
prospective client is still a prospective client.
Limited Distribution
Pooled Fund (LDPF)
• Firms must make every reasonable effort to provide a GIPS Report to all prospective LDPF
prospective investors when they initially become prospective investors.
The GIPS Report may be either:
• A GIPS Pooled Fund Report for the respective LDPF, or
• A GIPS Composite Report, but only if the LDPF is included in the respective composite.
• Once the firm has provided a GIPS Report to a prospective investor, the firm must provide
an updated GIPS Report at least once every 12 months, if the prospective investor is still a
prospective investor.
Broad Distribution
Pooled Fund (BDPF)
• Firms may provide a GIPS Pooled Fund Report to BDPF prospective investors, but are not
required to do so.
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2010 edition
Trading Expenses
Firms are required to calculate returns after
the deduction of actual trading expenses
during the period.
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TRANSACTION COSTS (FORMERLY TRADING EXPENSES)
2020 edition
Transaction Costs
Firms may use either actual or estimated
transaction costs for portfolios included in
composites.
Estimated transaction costs may be used
only for those portfolios for which actual
transaction costs are not known.
2010 Edition 2020 Edition
CARVE-OUTS
• A carve-out is a portion of a portfolio that is by itself representative of a distinct investment strategy.
• A carve-out must represent a standalone portfolio managed, or intended to be managed, according to the strategy.
• Any carve-out included in a composite must include cash and any related income.
Carve-out may be managed with its own cash or have cash
allocated synthetically.
Carve-out must be managed with its own
dedicated cash.
2010 Edition 2020 Edition
Total
Investments
Total
Cash
Carve-out
Investments
Dedicated
Cash
PORTFOLIO CARVE-OUT
Carve-out
Investments
Synthetically
allocated cash
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OR
Total
Investments
Total
Cash
Carve-out
Investments
Dedicated
Cash
PORTFOLIO CARVE-OUT CARVE-OUT
CARVE-OUTS
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• If the firm chooses to allocate cash to a carve-out and include it in a composite, it must create carve-outs with
allocated cash for all carve-outs managed in the same strategy across the entire firm
- All carve-outs with allocated cash must be included in the composite
• Carve-outs with allocated cash may be used for all periods
• Once the firm obtains a standalone portfolio managed in the same strategy as the carve-out(s) with allocated
cash, it must create a composite that includes only standalone portfolios
• The GIPS Composite Report for the composite that includes the carve-out(s) with allocated cash must
include returns and composite assets for the standalone composite as well
- See Appendix A, Sample 5, for a GIPS Composite Report for a composite that includes carve-outs with
allocated cash
2010 edition
External Valuation
Real estate investments must:
• have an external valuation at least
once every 12 months*
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EXTERNAL VALUATION
2020 edition
External Valuation
Real estate investments in a real estate open-end fund must:
• have an external valuation at least once every 12 months
Real estate investments not in a real estate open-end fund must:
• have an external valuation at least once every 12 months*; or
• be subject to an annual financial statement audit performed by an
independent public accounting firm.
- The real estate investments must be accounted for at fair value, and
- the most recent audited financial statements available must contain an
unmodified opinion issued by an independent public accounting firm.
Private market investments, other than real estate, (e.g., private equity and
infrastructure) should have an external valuation at least once every 12
months
2010 Edition 2020 Edition
* unless client agreements stipulate
otherwise, in which case real estate
investments must have an external
valuation at least once every 36
months or per the client agreement if
the client agreement requires external
valuations less frequently than every
36 months
• Firms must present TWRs unless certain criteria are met,
in which case the firm may present MWRs.
• Firms may choose to present MWRs vs TWRs if, for the
composite or pooled fund:
- The firm has control over external cash flows, and
- Each composite portfolio has, or the pooled fund has, at
least one of the following characteristics:
- It is closed – end
- It has a fixed life
- It has a fixed capital commitment
- Illiquid investments are a significant part of the
composite’s or pooled fund’s investment strategy
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TIME-WEIGHTED RETURN (TWR):
A method of calculating period-by-period
returns that reflects the change in value
and negates the effects of external cash
flows.
MONEY-WEIGHTED RETURN (MWR):
A return for a period that reflects the
change in value and the timing and size of
external cash flows. In the 2010 edition, the
term internal rate of return (IRR) was used.
2020 Edition
TIME-WEIGHTED VS MONEY-WEIGHTED RETURNS
2010 edition
Money-Weighted Returns
• Firms were required to include SI-IRRs
through each annual period end.
• Firms were required to include information
about committed capital, distributions, and
related multiples as of each annual period
end.
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MONEY-WEIGHTED RETURNS
2020 edition
Money-Weighted Returns
• GIPS Reports that include MWRs are
required to include MWRs for only one
period – from inception through the most
recent annual period end.
• GIPS Reports that include MWRs are
required to include information about
committed capital, distributions, and
related multiples only as of the most
recent annual period end.
2010 Edition 2020 Edition
• In 2020, composites and pooled funds that use a subscription line of credit and present MWRs must
present MWRs both with and without the subscription line of credit activity. The returns without the
subscription line of credit is not required if the subscription line of credit has the following characteristics:
- The principal was repaid within 120 days using committed capital drawn down through a capital call
- No principal was used to fund distributions.
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F
VALUATION & RETURN CALCULATION: TWR
Portfolio or
pooled fund
Portfolio valuation
requirements
Portfolio calculation
requirements
Composite calculation
requirements
Portfolios in
composites (except
private market
investment
portfolios)
• At least monthly
• At the time of large cash
flows
• At least monthly
• Sub-period returns at the time of
large cash flows
• Use daily-weighted cash flows
• Asset weight portfolio
returns (or use the
aggregate method) at least
monthly
Private market
investment portfolios
in composites
• At least quarterly
• No requirement to value
at the time of large cash
flows
• At least quarterly
• Use daily-weighted cash flows
• Asset weight portfolio
returns (or use the
aggregate method) at least
quarterly
Pooled funds not in
composites
• At least annually
• At the time of all
subscriptions &
redemptions
• Whenever returns are
calculated
• At least annually
• Sub-period returns at the time of
all subscriptions and redemptions
• N/A
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F
VALUATION & RETURN CALCULATION: MWR
Portfolio or
pooled fund
Portfolio valuation
requirements
Portfolio calculation
requirements
Composite calculation
requirements
Pooled funds and
portfolios in
composites
• Annually
• Whenever returns are
calculated
• Annualized since-inception MWRs
• Use daily cash flows as of 1 Jan
2020, and at least quarterly cash
flows before then
• Must aggregate the
portfolio-level information
for those portfolios included
in the composite for the
period from inception
through the most recent
annual period end
TOTAL FIRM ASSETS
for which the firm has
investment management
responsibility
Non-discretionary
portfolios at
Fair Value
Discretionary
portfolios at
Fair Value
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Firms must present total firm assets:
Uncalled
Committed
Capital
Advisory only
Assets
TOTAL FIRM ASSETS
Firms may present advisory-only
assets and uncalled committed
capital separately from total firm
assets, or combined with total firm
assets, as a separate value
• Advisory-only assets must not be included in total firm assets
• Uncalled committed capital must not be included in total firm assets for periods beginning on or after 1 Jan 2020
• No longer an option to present composite assets as a % of total firm assets instead of total firm assets (does not
apply retroactively)
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PORTABILITY
• The firm may present the acquired firm’s track record as its own (i.e., port history), on a composite-
specific or pooled fund-specific basis, if:
‒ Substantially all the investment decision makers are employed
‒ Decision-making process remains substantially intact and independent
‒ Records to support the performance from acquired firm
• The firm may link performance if, in addition to the above:
‒ There is no break in the track record between the past firm or affiliation and the new or acquiring firm
• There is no time limit on when firms may port history from the past firm or affiliation.
• Assets of the acquired non-compliant firm or affiliation must meet all the requirements of the GIPS
standards within one year of the acquisition date, on a prospective basis. (The one-year grace period
allows a compliant firm to not lose its compliant status when it acquires a non-compliant firm or
affiliation.)
When a compliant firm acquires a non-compliant firm or affiliation:
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BENCHMARKS
• If the firm chooses to include more than one benchmark in the GIPS Composite Report or GIPS Pooled Fund
Report, the firm must include all required information for all benchmarks.
• If the benchmark changes,
‒ must disclose the date and description of the change, and
‒ prospective benchmark changes must be disclosed for as long as returns for the prior benchmark are included
in the GIPS Report, and
‒ retroactive changes must be disclosed for a minimum of one year and for as long as they are relevant to
interpreting the performance track record.
• The firm must disclose the periodicity of benchmark returns, if calculated less frequently than monthly.
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NEW OR REVISED REQUIRED DISCLOSURES (PAGE 1 OF 4)
“GIPS® is a registered trademark of
CFA Institute. CFA Institute does not
endorse or promote this organization,
nor does it warrant the accuracy or
quality of the content contained herein.”
CLAIM OF COMPLIANCE
• Revised claim of compliance for a firm that is verified
INCEPTION DATE
• New disclosure: Composite or pooled fund inception
date
GIPS TRADEMARK
• New disclosure:
RISK
• New disclosure: Whether gross or net returns are used
to calculate presented risk measures
• New disclosure: For additional risk measures, if
included, a description of the additional risk measure
and the risk free rate used, if applicable
• Revised disclosure: No longer required to disclose that
the three year annualized ex post standard deviation is
not presented because 36 monthly returns are not
available unless the composite or pooled fund has at
least three annual periods of performance
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NEW OR REVISED REQUIRED DISCLOSURES (PAGE 2 OF 4)
REAL ESTATE
• Revised disclosure: For real estate investments that
are not in a real estate open-end fund, the firm must
disclose that:
o External valuations are obtained, and the
frequency with which they are obtained, or
o The firm relies on valuations from financial
statement audits.
LEVERAGE, DERIVATIVES, AND SHORT POSITIONS
• New disclosure: How these may be used must be
included in the composite description or pooled fund
description, if they are a material part of the strategy
RETURN TYPE
• New disclosure: If the return type has changed, (e.g.,
changed from presenting TWRs to MWRs)
ESTIMATED TRANSACTION COSTS
• New disclosure: If estimated transaction costs are
used, the estimated transaction costs used and how
they were determined
FEES
• New disclosure: If model investment management fees
are used to calculate net-of-fee returns and gross-of-
fees returns are not presented, the model fee used
(required for periods ending on or after 31 December
2020
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F
When presenting
performance for …
to a … the fee schedule must …
A standalone portfolio prospective client reflect the fee schedule for a standalone portfolio
managed to the strategy being presented
A composite that includes
carve-outs
prospective client for a multi-
asset strategy portfolio
reflect the fee schedule for a multi-asset strategy
portfolio managed to the strategy being presented
A wrap fee composite wrap fee prospective client reflect the total wrap fee
A composite prospective investor for a
pooled fund
disclose the pooled fund current fee schedule and
expense ratio
NEW OR REVISED REQUIRED DISCLOSURES (PAGE 3 OF 4)
FEE SCHEDULE
• If the fee schedule includes performance-based fees or carried interest, must disclose the performance-based fee
description or carried interest description (e.g., fee rate, hurdle rate, clawback, HWM, crystallization schedule)
Theoretical performance, if presented on a GIPS Report, must be presented as supplemental information and must
disclose:
• that the results are theoretical and not based on the performance of actual portfolios
• whether the theoretical performance was derived from the retroactive or prospective application of a model
• a basic description of the model and assumptions used to calculate the theoretical performance sufficient for the
prospective client or prospective investor to interpret the theoretical performance, including if it is based on
model performance, back-tested performance, or hypothetical performance
• whether the theoretical performance reflects the deduction of investment management fees, transaction costs, or
other fees and charges that an actual client portfolio would have paid or will pay.
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NEW OR REVISED REQUIRED DISCLOSURES (PAGE 4 OF 4)
THEORETICAL PERFORMANCE
Certain disclosures must be included for a minimum of one year and may subsequently be removed if the firm
determines that the disclosure is no longer relevant to interpreting the track record.
• Significant events that would help a prospective client/investor interpret the GIPS Report
• Changes to the name of the composite / pooled fund
• Retroactive benchmark change
• Correction of a material error
• Change in the type of return presented
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SUNSET PROVISIONS
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Prepare a GIPS Advertisement
• Firms are permitted to advertise composites, LDPFs,
and BDPFs
• New Fundamental Requirements applicable to all
GIPS Advertisements
Prepare a GIPS Advertisement that includes a GIPS
Report
• Requirements differ for GIPS Reports that present
TWR and GIPS Reports that present MWR
Do not mention the GIPS standards
GIPS ADVERTISING GUIDELINES
• A GIPS Advertisement is an advertisement by a
GIPS-compliant firm that adheres to the
requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines
• GIPS Advertising Guidelines replace the Broadly
Distributed PF Guidance Statement for BDPFs.
1
Firms have three options when advertising:
2
3
30
Verification is intended to
provide a firm and its
prospective and current clients
and pooled fund investors
additional confidence in the
firm’s claim of compliance with
the GIPS standards.
The GIPS standards recommend that firms be verified.
A verification report is issued on a
firm-wide basis. The initial
minimum period for which a
verification can be performed is
one year (or from firm inception
date through period end if less
than one year).
A process by which an
independent verifier conducts
testing of a firm on a firm-wide
basis, in accordance with the
required verification procedures
of the GIPS standards.
VERIFICATION
Definition Purpose Scope
A verification report opines that, for the period(s) for which the verification has been performed, the firm’s
policies and procedures for complying with the GIPS standards related to composite and pooled fund
maintenance, as well as the calculation, presentation, and distribution of performance, have been, in all
material respects:
• designed in compliance with the GIPS standards; and
• implemented on a firm-wide basis.
Verification cannot be carried out only on a composite or a pooled fund and, accordingly, provides no assurance
about the performance of any specific composite or pooled fund or any specific GIPS Report. (Detailed testing
of a specific composite or pooled fund can be carried out via a performance examination, in accordance with the
required procedures of the GIPS standards.)
Firms must comply with all applicable requirements of the GIPS standards, which include requirements beyond
those specified in the required verification procedures. Therefore, verification does not provide assurance on the
firm’s claim of compliance with the GIPS standards in its entirety.
VERIFICATION
31
• An asset owner is defined as an entity that manages investments,
directly and/or through the use of external managers, on behalf of
participants, beneficiaries, or the organization itself
• The term “asset owner” applies to organizations and not to individuals
• Asset owners are typically accountable to an oversight body (e.g., board
of trustees) responsible for establishing investment policies and
monitoring performance
• Some asset owners manage assets not only for themselves, but also
compete for business
‒ When competing for business, asset owners must comply the GIPS
Standards for Firms
‒ When presenting to oversight bodies, asset owners must comply with
the GIPS Standards for Asset Owners
32
ASSET OWNERS
Pensions
Endowments
Foundations
Family offices
Provident funds
Insurers and reinsurers
Sovereign wealth funds
Fiduciaries
33
Asset owners have always been able
to claim compliance, but because the
GIPS standards were originally
designed for investment managers,
many asset owners struggled to
understand how to apply provisions
not originally designed for them.
REASONS ASSET OWNERS COMPLY
• Demonstrates a commitment to follow global industry standards
and best practice for valuation, performance calculation, and
performance presentation
• Requires the establishment of robust performance policies and
procedures
• Demonstrates a commitment to consistent, transparent, and
comparable methods of calculating and presenting performance
• Demonstrates a commitment to adopt the same principles that
may be required of external investment managers
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• The asset owner must provide a GIPS Asset Owner
Report for all total funds and any additional composites
that have been created to the oversight body
• The asset owner may provide a GIPS Asset Owner
Report to those who have a more indirect fiduciary role
but is not required to do so
• Asset owners must initially attain compliance, on an
asset owner-wide basis, for a minimum of one year
• GIPS Asset Owner Reports must initially include the
track record for the period for which the asset owner
claims compliance
• Prospectively, the asset owner must build towards
presenting at least a 10 year compliant track record
• Only GIPS-compliant performance may be included in
GIPS Asset Owner Reports
• Asset owners can attain compliance at any time. There
is no minimum effective compliance date.
TOTAL FUND: A pool of assets
managed by an asset owner according to
a specific investment mandate, which is
typically composed of multiple asset
classes. The total fund is typically
composed of underlying portfolios, each
representing one of the strategies used to
achieve the asset owner’s investment
mandate.
GIPS ASSET OWNER REPORT
GIPS ASSET OWNER REPORT: A
presentation for a total fund or composite
that contains all the information required
by the GIPS standards.
35
GIPS Reports with
periods ending
on or after 31 Dec 2020
must be prepared in
accordance with the
2020 edition
GIPS Reports with
periods ending
prior to 31 Dec 2020
may be prepared in
accordance with the
2010 edition
EFFECTIVE DATE
• Input data that feed into GIPS Reports
must adhere to the requirements of the
2020 edition as of 1 January 2020.
• Firms may choose to early adopt the
2020 GIPS standards.
• Regardless of when firms choose to
adopt, they must comply with all
requirements of the 2020 edition of the
GIPS standards, including the
requirements related to GIPS Reports.31 Dec 2020
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RESOURCES
• 2020 edition of the GIPS standards
- www.cfainstitute.org/ethics/codes/gips-standards
• Recorded webinars
- www.gipsstandards.org/compliance/Pages/articles.aspx
• Help Desk
• Interpretations of the provisions in the 2020 GIPS standards are being created
- Goal is to issue this guidance for firms in early 2020 and for asset owners later in 2020
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OTHER RESOURCES BY CFA INSTITUTECODES OF CONDUCT
• Based on the CFA Institute Code of Ethics and Standards
of Professional Conduct - the ethical benchmark for
investment professionals around the globe
• Individually tailored for Asset Managers, Pension Trustees,
and Endowment Trustees
BENEFITS
• Defines and aligns behavioral expectations of individuals
within the organization
• Demonstrates the organization’s commitment to ethics
• Helps build an organizational culture that attracts and
retains clients, partners, employees, and volunteers
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OTHER STANDARDS BY CFA INSTITUTE
The primary purpose of the ESG standard is to build market integrity by establishing a
framework for investment managers to better communicate, and investors to better
understand, the nature and characteristics of a fund or strategy that incorporates ESG
factors into the investment process to improve risk-adjusted returns, satisfy client-imposed
constraints, and/or pursue objectives that go beyond traditional financial objectives.
The standard will include:
• Terminology;
• A classification system so that investors
have a common framework for comparing
funds and strategies;
• Minimum disclosure specifications for the
marketing and management of the types of
funds and strategies described above so
prospective investors can have a degree of
assurance that the investment is aligned with
their objectives;
• A guide that explains common approaches in
an unbiased manner; and
• Test methods and/or assurance procedures.
The standard will NOT:
• Prescribe, or limit, the use of ESG data or
methodologies;
• Prescribe the data that should be disclosed by
issuers or evaluate materiality of such data;
• Take policy positions;
• Address the interaction between ESG factors
and financial performance; or
• Prescribe methodologies for measuring ESG
performance
ESG
UNDER
CONSTRUCTION
See “ESG Investing and
Analysis” on the CFA Institute
website for more information
ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL, GOVERNANCE (ESG)
CONTACT INFORMATION
Ken Robinson, CFA, CIPM, CPA, PFS
Director, Global Industry Standards
CFA Institute
(434) 951-5331
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THANK YOU!